The effect of microfluidic geometry on myoblast migration

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Abstract

In vitro systems comprised of wells interconnected by microchannels have emerged as a platform for the study of cell migration or multicellular models. In the present study, we systematically evaluated the effect of microchannel width on spontaneous myoblast migration across these microchannels-from the proximal to the distal chamber. Myoblast migration was examined in microfluidic devices with varying microchannel widths of 1.5-20 μm, and in chips with uniform microchannel widths over time spans that are relevant for myoblast-to-myofiber differentiation in vitro. We found that the likelihood of spontaneous myoblast migration was microchannel width dependent and that a width of 3 μm was necessary to limit spontaneous migration below 5% of cells in the seeded well after 48 h. These results inform the future design of Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microchannel-based co-culture platforms as well as future in vitro studies of myoblast migration.

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Atmaramani, R., Black, B. J., Lam, K. H., Sheth, V. M., Pancrazio, J. J., Schmidtke, D. W., & Alsmadi, N. Z. (2019). The effect of microfluidic geometry on myoblast migration. Micromachines, 10(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/mi10020143

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